Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jkksz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T15:43:09.090Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Mexican debt crisis redux: international interbank markets and financial crisis, 1977–1982

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 April 2015

Sebastian Alvarez*
Affiliation:
University of Geneva

Abstract

The international banking crisis that began in 2007 has brought the relationship between international banking activities and financial crises to the forefront. The growing reliance on foreign interbank funding by domestic banks has been recognized as a crucial factor in explaining the banking and sovereign debt crisis currently affecting several peripheral European countries. This article shows that the link between financial crisis and international interbank lending is not a new phenomenon; a similar trend can be observed in the Mexican banking sector during the run-up to its 1982 debt crisis. I explore the international activities of Mexican commercial banks in the years preceding the country's default and demonstrate that they became involved in international lending which was funded largely through heavy short-term interbank foreign borrowing. I provide new archival evidence which shows that in intermediating foreign finance with local public and private borrowers, Mexican banks incurred maturity, interest rate and currency mismatches and dangerously increased their risk position. This article provides insights for understanding the Mexican debt crisis as closely intertwined with problems in the domestic banking sector, which were, in turn, linked to its involvement in the international financial system.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © European Association for Banking and Financial History e.V. 2015 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Sources

Bank for International Settlements' Archives: Box 1/3A(3)M vol. 1 (Basle)Google Scholar
Euromoney (London: several issues)Google Scholar
Federal Reserve Bank of New York's Archives: Box 108403, Box 142529, and Central Files - Files: BAC 1982, BAC 1983, C261 Mexico - Banco de Mexico 1980–1982, C261 - Mexican Government 1917–1984 (New York)Google Scholar
Informe Anual del Banco de México (Mexico, D.F.: 1977–1982).Google Scholar
International Monetary Fund's Archives: OMDF Jacques de Larosière's chronological files, Box 3 (Washington DC)Google Scholar
The Banker (London: several issues)Google Scholar
New York Times (New York: several issues)Google Scholar

References

Allen, M., Rosenberg, C., Keller, C., Setser, B. and Roubini, N. (2002). A balance sheet approach to financial crisis. IMF Working Paper, WP/02/210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Altimir, O. and Devlin, R. (1994). Moratoria de la deuda en América Latina. Mexico, DF: Fondo de Cultura Económica.Google Scholar
Del Angel, G. (2002). Paradoxes of Financial Development: The Construction of the Mexican Banking System. 1941–1982. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Del Angel, G. (2006). The corporate governance of the Mexican banking system: a historical perspective, 1940–2000. CIDE, Documento de trabajo no. 373.Google Scholar
Bértola, L. and Ocampo, J. (2012). The Economic Development of Latin America Since Independence. London: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
BIS (1983). The International Interbank Market: A Descriptive Study. Basle, Switzerland.Google Scholar
Borja Martínez, F. (1978). Desarrollo del derecho bancario mexicano (1968–1977). In Jurídica: Anuario Del Departamento de Derecho de La Universidad Iberoamericana, vol. i. Mexico, DF: Universidad Iberoamericana.Google Scholar
Boughton, J. (2001). Silent Revolution: The International Monetary Fund, 1979-1989. Washington, DC: International Monetary Fund.Google Scholar
Calomiris, C. and Mason, J. (1997). Contagion and bank failures during the Great Depression: the June 1932 Chicago banking panic. American Economic Review, 87(5), pp. 863–83.Google Scholar
Calomiris, C. and Carlson, M. (2014). Corporate governance and risk management at unprotected banks: national banks in the 1890s. NBER Working Paper Series, no. 19806.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carral, J. (2010). La banca extranjera y la estatización de la banca. In Espinosa Rugarcía, A. and Cárdenas Sánchez, E. (eds.), La nacionalización bancaria, 25 años después, vol. ii. Mexico, DF: Centro de Estudios Espinosa Yglesias.Google Scholar
Caruana, J. and Van Rixtel, A. (2013). International financial markets and bank funding in the euro area: dynamics and participants. BIS Research paper.Google Scholar
Cline, W. (1984). International Debt: Systemic Risk and Policy Response. Washington, DC: Institute for International Economics.Google Scholar
Cline, W. (1995). International Debt Reexamined. Washington, DC: Institute for International Economics.Google Scholar
Committee on the Global Financial System (2010). The functioning and resilience of cross-border funding markets. CGFS Papers, no. 37.Google Scholar
Committee on the Global Financial System (2011). The impact of sovereign credit risk on bank funding conditions. CGFS Papers, no. 43.Google Scholar
Davis, S. (1980). The Euro-Bank: Its Origins, Management and Outlook. New York: John Wiley and Sons.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Devlin, R. (1989). Debt and Crisis in Latin America: The Supply Side of the Story. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Devlin, R. and Ffrench-Davis, R. (1995). The great Latin America debt crisis: a decade of asymmetric adjustment. Revista de Economica Politica, 15(3), pp. 117–42.Google Scholar
Diaz-Alejandro, C. (1984). Latin American debt: I don't think we are in Kansas anymore. Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 15(2), pp. 335403.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Diaz-Alejandro, C. (1985). Good-bye financial repression, hello financial crash. Journal of Development Economics, 19, pp. 124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dornbusch, R. (1990). Mexican debt. In Brothers, D. and Wick, A. (eds.), Mexico's Search for a New Development Strategy. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.Google Scholar
Dufey, G. and Giddy, I. (1994). The International Money Market. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.Google Scholar
Edwards, S. (1986). The pricing of bonds and bank loans in international markets: an empirical analysis of developing countries' foreign borrowing. European Economic Review, 30(3), pp. 565–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eichengreen, B. and Hausmann, R. (1999). Exchange rates and financial fragility. NBER Working Paper Series, no. 7418.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fender, I. and Mcguire, P. (2010). European banks' US dollar funding pressures. BIS Quarterly Review, June, pp. 5764.Google Scholar
Folkerts-Landau, D. (1985). The changing role of international bank lending in development finance. Staff Papers – International Monetary Fund, 32(2), pp. 317–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Green, R. (1988). La deuda externa de México, 1973–1987: de la abundancia a la escasez de créditos. Mexico, DF: Editorial Nueva Imagen.Google Scholar
Green, R. (1998). Lecciones de la deuda externa de México, de 1973 a 1997: de abundancias y escaseces. México, DF: Fondo de Cultura Económica.Google Scholar
Gurría, J. (1988). Debt restructuring: Mexico as a case study. In Griffith-Jones, S. (ed.), Managing World Debt. New York: St Martin's Press.Google Scholar
Gutierrez, R. (1986). El endeudamiento del sector privado de México: expansión y negociación. Comercio exterior, 36(4), pp. 337–43.Google Scholar
Gutierrez, R. (1992). El endeudamiento externo del sector privado de Mexico, 1971–1991. Comercio exterior, 42(9), pp. 852–64.Google Scholar
Honohan, P., Donovan, D., Gorecki, P. and Mottiar, R. (2010). The Irish banking crisis: regulatory and financial stability policy 2003–2008. MPRA Paper no. 24896, pp. 1–184.Google Scholar
Kaminsky, G. and Schmukler, S. (2003). Short-run pain, long-run gain: the effects of financial liberalization. IMF Working Paper, WP/03/34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kraft, J. (1984). The Mexican Rescue. New York: Group of Thirty.Google Scholar
Krugman, P. (1999). Balance sheets, the transfer problem, and financial crises. In Isard, P., Razin, A. and Rose, A. (eds.), International Finance and Financial Crises: Essays in Honor of Robert P. Flood. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers.Google Scholar
Marichal, C. (2000). Deuda externa y política en México, 1946–2000. In Bizberg, I. and Meyer, L. (eds.), México al filo del siglo XXI: cambio y resistencia. Mexico, DF: Océano.Google Scholar
Marichal, C. (2011). Crisis de deudas soberanas en México: empresas estatales, bancos y relaciones internacionales, 1970–1990. Historia y Política, 26, pp. 111–33.Google Scholar
Mckinnon, R. and Pill, H. (1998). International overborrowing: a decomposition of credit and currency risks. World Development, 26(7), pp. 1267–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mendoza, E. and Terrones, M. (2008). An anatomy of credit booms: evidence from macro aggregates and micro data. NBER Working Paper Series, no. 14049.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mentre, P. (1985). The international interbank market and international bank lending. FRBNY Archives, box 108403.Google Scholar
Merk Martel, M., Van Rixtel, A. and Gonzalez Mota, E. (2012). Business models of international banks in the wake of the 2007–2009 global financial crisis. Banco de España Revista de Estabilidad Financiera, 22, pp. 99121.Google Scholar
Negrete Cárdenas, S. (1999). Mexican debt crises: a new approach to their genesis and resolution. MS, University of Essex.Google Scholar
Negrete Cárdenas, S. (forthcoming). Debt and Crises in Mexico. Mexico, DF: Centro de Estudios Espinosa Yglesias.Google Scholar
Quijano, J. (1987). México: Estado y Banca Privada. Mexico, DF: CIDE.Google Scholar
Ramírez, M. (1986). Development Banking in Mexico: The Case of the Nacional Financiera, S.A. New York: Praeger.Google Scholar
Sachs, J. and Williamson, J. (1985). External debt and macroeconomic performance in Latin America and East Asia. Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 2, pp. 523–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sánchez Aguilar, E. (1973). The international activities of US commercial banks: a case study: Mexico. MS, Harvard University.Google Scholar
Seijas Román, G. (1991). Políticas y estrategias de la banca múltiple. Mexico, DF: Colegio de México.Google Scholar
Shambaugh, J. (2012). The euro's three crises. Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, Spring, pp. 157211.Google Scholar
Solís, L. (1997). Evolución del sistema financiero mexicano hacia los umbrales del siglo XXI. Mexico, DF: Siglo XXI.Google Scholar
Solís, L. and Zedillo, E. (1985). The foreign debt of Mexico. In Smith, G. and Cuddington, J. (eds.), International Debt and the Developing Countries. Washington, DC: The World Bank.Google Scholar
Special Investigation Commission (2010). Causes of the Collapse of the Icelandic Banks – Responsibility, Mistakes and Negligence.Google Scholar
Sundararajan, V. and Baliño, T. (1991). Banking Crises: Cases and Issues. Washington, DC: International Monetary Fund.Google Scholar
Van Rixtel, A. and Gasperini, G. 2013. Financial crises and bank funding: recent experience in the euro area. BIS Working Papers, no. 406.Google Scholar
Wellons, P. (1977). Borrowing by Developing Countries on the Euro-Currency Market. Paris: OECD.Google Scholar
White, E. (1984). A reinterpretation of the banking crisis of 1930. Journal of Economic History, 44(1), pp. 119–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zedillo, E. (1985). The Mexican external debt: the last decade. In Wionczek, M. and Tomassini, L. (eds.), Politics and Economics of External Debt Crisis: The Latin American Experience. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.Google Scholar